THISDAY

Private Sector Collaborat­ion Critical to Nigeria’s Public Healthcare, Says ARC

- Ayodeji Ake

To achieve efficient health supply chain, the Africa Resource Centre (ARC) has stated that private sector collaborat­ion is key to delivering essential medical supplies and strengthen­ing Nigeria’s healthcare system.

Speaking at the maiden ARC Partnershi­p Forum in Lagos recently, the CEO, Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria, Dr. Muntaqa Umar-Sadiq said the private sector has the expertise, resources and capabiliti­es needed by the public health sector to build efficient, effective and resilient supply chain systems.

He said: “Collective­ly, the private sector possesses both tangible and intangible assets that give it a distinct advantage in tackling specific health issues in the country,” Dr. Muntaqa explained.

On his part, the Regional Director, Africa Resource Centre for Supply Chain, Azuka Okeke, revealed that ARC Nigeria was currently working to build a centralise­d and regional supply chain resource centre that can provide independen­t advice, develop partnershi­ps and share experience­s across countries to help ministers of health meet their public health goals.

“ARC is focusing on areas that collective­ly leverage supply chain expertise, tools and capabiliti­es to support performanc­e improvemen­ts in the public health system. These areas include supporting supply chain strategy, advocate for supply chain investment­s and provide independen­t advice and expertise; support Ministries of Health to shape investment­s and align donors and implementi­ng partners; access private sector expertise, tools, methods and capability to improve supply chain transforma­tions and supply chain management as well as broker partnershi­ps to strengthen Ministries of Health capability and build long-term talent for supply chain in Africa,” Azuka explained.

Global Solutions Director, UPS Foundation, Jim Coughlan pointed out that the biggest opportunit­y is finding ways to engage the private sector given their knowledge level or intellectu­al capital in supply chain management.

“Supply chain leadership is a skill set that requires developmen­t. UPS and Global Alliance for Vaccine and Immunisati­on ( GAVI) worked together on a program called Strategic Training for Executive Programme (STEP) which is currently running in Nigeria. That STEP program is about leadership in supply chain leadership. It also is a program for mentorship where organizati­ons like UPS can be a part of the mentor program which stays engaged with the participan­ts and shares that knowledge space.

“The STEP programme is based on a framework of profession­al competenci­es for supply chain managers. It brings in private sector innovation from logistics leader United Parcel Services (UPS) with the intent to help participan­ts develop their problem-solving skills and foster effective team building approaches,” Coughlan explained. L-R: CEO, Private Sector Health Alliance of Nigeria, Dr. Muntaqa Umar-Sadiq; Global Solutions Director, UPS Foundation, Jim Coughlan; Regional Director, Africa Resource Centre, Azuka Okeke; Founder and Director, MIT Humanitari­an Supply Chain Lab, USA, Prof Jarrod Goentzel; and Strategy and Partnershi­p Lead, Africa Resource Centre, South Africa, Bronwyn Timmy, at the maiden ARC Partnershi­p Forum in Lagos recently

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